It will be eventually up to an Italian court to decide what costs her family sustained - including the expenses they incurred as one or more lived in Italy the whole time she was in detention, which required travel costs from and back to the US - during the approximately 4 years of her detention. The right to compensation for a miscarriage of justice, at least for a revision trial outcome favorable to the accused, is covered under Italian law CPP Article 643. Paragraph 1 entitles compensation commensurate for the duration of the detention and the personal and family consequences resulting from the conviction. Paragraph 2 states that compensation is achieved through the payment of a sum of money (no limit is specified) or, if appropriate, a life annuity. Paragraph 1 provides an out for the state, in disallowing compensation if the miscarriage of justice was the result of malice or gross negligence by the accused.Thanks for providing the information. As you know, the ECHR will only cover costs (reasonable costs) that are specific to that court case in question. The fact that Knox' parents chose to hire an expensive PR agency cannot be attributed to Italy.
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In my view, any costs that Knox and her family sustained in countering the malicious media campaign against her, clearly instigated and propelled by the prosecution, must be considered among the reasonable defense costs that must be compensated under Italian law.
It should also be pointed out that the compensation award trial judgment may be the basis of an application to the ECHR if it is considered to be unfair by the awardee. There is ECHR case law that awards for miscarriages of justice must be fair in accordance with Convention Article 6.1.
Source: https://www.altalex.com/documents/news/2013/12/23/revisione
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